Whitaker v. Shepherd

134 S.W.2d 604, 280 Ky. 713, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 199
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 S.W.2d 604 (Whitaker v. Shepherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Shepherd, 134 S.W.2d 604, 280 Ky. 713, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 199 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

The appellant and appellee own adjoining tracts of land located on Licking River, Magoffin County, Kentucky, which they have owned and occupied for many years under their respective chains of title and each of which constitutes portions of a rather large body of land owned originally by Bryson Shepherd.

Perhaps it might be well to here state, for a clearer understanding of this situation, that the appellee, John B. Shepherd, and Cynthia Whitaker, the wife of Benton or T. B. Whitaker, and mother of the appellant, were children of Bryson Shepherd, the owner of the entire tract containing the trifling strip here in controversy, which consists of about 1/20 of an acre of poor gravel land lying on the side of the river bank. John Shepherd’s land adjoins it.

*714 John Shepherd, now about 80 years of age, states that having, within the last seven or eight years, heard that his nephew, Bill Whitaker, was making claim to this small strip of land and was attempting to bolster up and assert such claim by enclosing a portion of it with a “short-lived” fence and sporadically cultivating it for the last three or four years, he brought this suit, quia timet, under the provisions of Section 11, Kentucky Statutes, alleging by his petition that he is now and was at the times mentioned the owner and in possession of this certain tract or strip of land in controversy, which was embraced within the boundary lines of a larger tract of land conveyed him in 1886 by his father, Bryson Shepherd, by deed which was duly put to record.

The boundary calls of this deed, having relation to and embracing the disputed strip of land, are as follows:

“Beginning on a white oak tree running with the conditional line between said farm and Bryson Shepherd’s farm; thence up the point to the top running the ridge between Will’s Branch and Grassy Creek; thence around the head of Will’s Branch and Rock House Branch to the conditional line between Vinson Hale and said farm to a marked beech tree, up the point to the top around the ridge to a knob at the end of Bryson Shepherd’s field; thence straight down the point to the beginning. ’ ’

_ The petition further alleged that the defendant, Bill Whitaker, “is now and has for some time past, been wrongfully, illegally and without right, setting’ up a claim of some kind and nature to a part of said land and giving it out in words and speeches that he is the owner of a portion thereof, and that he is thereby casting a cloud upon plaintiff’s title, unjustly and unlawfully,” and concludes with the prayer that plaintiff be adjudged the owner of all the land, including this strip in dispute, within the boundary described and that the defendant, Bill Whitaker, be perpetually enjoined and restrained from entering upon, interfering with or molesting bim in the use, occupancy and enjoyment of his property and that he be quieted in his title thereto.

The appellant, defendant below, answered the petition, denying Shepherd’s allegation of ownership of the strip of land in question or its inclusion within the boundary of land set out in his petition as having been *715 conveyed him by his parents, Bryson Shepherd and wife, in 1886, by deed duly recorded.

For further answer and counterclaim to the petition, he alleged his ownership of an adjoining tract of some 75 acres of the dower land of Betty Shepherd, allotted her from the land of Bryson Shepherd, his and plaintiff’s common source of title, in 1897 and which tract he alleged was conveyed him by his parents, Benton and Cynthia Whitaker, by their deed of April 5, 1913, and that he had then taken over the possession and occupancy of all the land embraced within the calls of the deed, which he in turn alleges embraces and includes the strip of land here in controversy. Further the answer alleged that he had been in the actual, notorious, continuous and adverse possession of the land in question for more than fifteen years before the commencement of plaintiff’s action and pleaded the fifteen year statute of limitations in bar to plaintiff’s alleged right of ownership of said disputed strip. The answer concludes with the prayer that plaintiff’s action be dismissed and that he be permanently enjoined from mo-, testing the defendant in the peaceful enjoyment of his said boundary of land, embracing this strip in dispute.

It is thus obvious that the issues thus joined on the pleadings between the parties are (1) as to which of these two boundaries embraces this disputed 1/20 of an acre of land and (2) if same is shown by the evidence to lie within the boundary of plaintiff (here appellee), whether or not it has been lost to him by the defendant’s having actually occupied'it adversely, continuously and notoriously for a period of fifteen years next before the commencement of this action.

The boundary line in dispute, upon which turns the location of this strip of land (that is, whether it is a part of and included within the boundary calls of plaintiff’s deed or that of defendant), appears to be that described by the last two calls of defendant’s deed, reading “thence down the point with said line to the river; thence down the river to the begvrmmg, containing 75 acres more or less.” (Italics ours.)

It is appellee’s contention, and so testified, that these calls of the defendant’s deed were in error and caused him to think that his tract included and embraced the disputed strip of land, in that the call of defendant’s deed, reading “thence down the point to the river,” *716 should have read “across the river with plaintiff’s line to a white oak, the beginning point.”

As to this, it is to be noted that if the strip of land in controversy was included in the calls of plaintiff’s deed, it would, due to its having been granted him by Bryson Shepherd, his father, in 1886, continue to be and remain his under his deed, even though it were mistakenly included and embraced within the calls of the commissioner’s deed conveying’ in 1897 this 75 acre tract to Bryson Shepherd’s widow as her dower interest in her husband’s land. Such later conveyance of the strip in controversy, derived from Bryson Shepherd, its common source, could not prevail over the latter’s earlier conveyance of it (in 1886) to his son, John Shepherd, the appellee.

However, it is to 'be noted that while appellant, in his answer, avers that the strip of land in dispute is included within the boundary calls of the deed made him by his parents, Benton and Cynthia Whitaker, in 1913 to the 75 acre tract which they had acquired as a part of the Bryson Shepherd land in 1897, he manifestly realizes that his later deed would be ineffective to convey the disputed strip as against the earlier deed of Bryson Shepherd to his son, in that he also bases his claim to this strip upon his actual and continuous adverse possession of it for the statutory period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.W.2d 604, 280 Ky. 713, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-shepherd-kyctapphigh-1939.